The Walt Disney Co. and Charter Communications reached an agreement that will restore ESPN to Spectrum cable just in time for the first "Monday Night Football" game of the NFL season.
The two sides ended their dispute over channel fees, which has deprived some 15 million of Charter's Spectrum subscribers across 41 states from popular Disney channels including ESPN and ABC since Aug. 31.
Charter announced the deal Monday, saying most of Disney's networks and stations would be available for Spectrum video customers immediately.
COMCAST, DISNEY MOVE UP DATE FOR HULU DEAL
The deal comes just hours before the "Monday Night Football" game between the New York Jets and the Buffalo Bills is set to air on ESPN. Without it, Spectrum subscribers in New York City and Los Angeles would have been unable to watch the game.
Charter previously paid Disney more than $2.2 billion annually for the right to distribute the media giant's channels to subscribers. The terms of the new deal were not disclosed.
DISNEY ENCOURAGES SPECTRUM CUSTOMERS TO MOVE TO HULU + LIVE TV AMID CHARTER DISPUTE
Companies like Charter say rising distribution fees are forcing cable companies to increase prices, causing consumers to leave. Disney counts on fees from companies such as Charter pay to partly cover rising programming costs, including the rights to air sports such as the NFL and NBA.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
Charter said under the new agreement, Spectrum customers will still have access to 19 Disney-owned networks, including ABC-owned television stations, the Disney Channel, FX, the Nat Geo Channel, and the full ESPN network suite. But some Disney-owned channels will no longer be available on Spectrum, including Baby TV, Disney Junior, Disney XD, Freeform, FXM, FXX, Nat Geo Wild, and Nat Geo Mundo.
Reuters contributed to this report.